Current:Home > InvestTulane University students build specially designed wheelchairs for children with disabilities -Stellar Financial Insights
Tulane University students build specially designed wheelchairs for children with disabilities
View
Date:2025-04-28 00:01:31
A groundbreaking program at Tulane University is creating waves of change for young children with disabilities, providing them with specially designed chairs that offer newfound mobility and independence.
Volunteers at the university dedicate their time and skills to building the chairs with the help of 3D printing technology. They have built 15 chairs this year.
"It's very grounding," said Alyssa Bockman, a Tulane senior who is part of the team that builds the chairs. "You can...make such a huge impact on a child with only a couple hours of effort."
The chair design is simple yet effective, combining wooden bases and wheels with 3D-printed plastic attachments, all assembled by hand in child-friendly, bright colors. As each chair is personalized and signed by its makers, they carry messages of love and care from their creators to their young users.
The man at the front of the creation is Noam Platt, an architect in New Orleans who discovered the chair's design on an Israeli website — Tikkun Olam Makers — that lists open-source information for developers like him. His organization, Make Good, which focuses on devices that people can't find in the commercial market or can't afford, partnered with Tulane to make the chairs for children.
"Part of it is really empowering the clinicians to understand that we can go beyond what's commercially available," Platt said. "We can really create almost anything."
Jaxon Fabregas, a 4-year-old from Covington, Louisiana, is among the children who received a chair. He is living with a developmental delay and dystonia, which affects his muscles. Jaxon's parents, Elizabeth and Brian Fabregas, bought him the unique wheelchair, which allowed him to sit up independently. Before he received the chair, he was not mobile.
"I mean it does help kids and it's helped Jaxon, you know, become more mobile and be able to be adapting to the other things," said Brian Fabregas.
Another child, Sebastian Grant, who was born prematurely and spent months in the neonatal ICU, received a customized chair that could support his ventilator and tubes. The chair allowed him to sit upright for the first time in his life.
"This is a chair that he could be in and go around the house...actually be in control of himself a little bit," said Michael Grant, Sebastian's father.
Aside from the functionality, the chairs are also cost-effective. According to Platt, each chair costs under $200 to build — a fraction of the $1,000 to $10,000 that a traditional wheelchair for small children might cost.
David BegnaudDavid Begnaud is the lead national correspondent for "CBS Mornings" based in New York City.
Twitter Facebook InstagramveryGood! (383)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Kevin, Frankie Jonas on their childhood, 'Claim to Fame' Season 3
- Amazon offering $20 credit to some customers before Prime Day. Here's how to get it.
- Congress OKs bill overhauling oversight of troubled federal Bureau of Prisons
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Beat the Heat With These Cooling Beauty Products From Skin Gym, Peter Thomas Roth, Coola, and More
- Baltimore bridge collapse survivor recounts fighting for his life in NBC interview
- VP visits U.S. men's basketball team in Vegas before Paris Olympics
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- Presidential battle could play role in control of state capitols in several swing states
Ranking
- Why members of two of EPA's influential science advisory committees were let go
- Big 12 commissioner: 'We will be the deepest conference in America'
- Short-handed Kona public defender’s office won’t accept new drunken driving cases
- Elevate Your Summer Style With 63% Discounts on Early Amazon Prime Day Fashion Finds
- All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
- Judge says Rudy Giuliani bankruptcy case likely to be dismissed. But his debts aren’t going away
- Chicago woman gets 58-year prison term for killing and dismembering her landlord
- 'Longlegs' will haunt your nightmares and 'hijack your subconscious,' critics say
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
Messi’s 109th goal leads defending champion Argentina over Canada 2-0 and into Copa America final
Long-unpaid bills lead to some water service cutoffs in Mississippi’s capital city
A troubling first: Rising seas blamed for disappearance of rare cactus in Florida
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
Jon Bon Jovi Mourns Death of His Mom Carol Bongiovi at 83
Keri Russell Says Girls Were Out of the Mickey Mouse Club Once They Looked Sexually Active
Baltimore bridge collapse survivor recounts fighting for his life in NBC interview